admiral n...in Every harbour the first arriving Ship is admiral of the harbour her Captain administering Justice tho with Frequent Appeals to the Leutenant Governor to whom both French & English are Equaly subject tho they have Each their separate admiral in Every Port where they meetPRINTED ITEM DNE-citG.M. Story OCT 1971JH OCT 1971Used I and SupUsed I and Sup3Used Iskipper; fishing admiralChecked by Cathy Wiseman on Tue 15 Jul 201
admiral nTwo days afterwards...the Admiral Captain Templeton entered my frame [and] kept me from t...
admiral nADMIRAL n. 1. From the 16c. to early 19c. the first English fishing vessel to enter a Nfl...
Vice-admiral n...that the Master of every such Second Fishing Ship as shall enter any such Harbour ...
admiral n...the ship that first entered the harbour was to be admiral...PRINTED ITEM DNE-citDNE-c...
admiral n...That (according the Ancient Custom there used) every such Fishing Ship from England, W...
admiral nThe epithet of _admiral_ was also formerly applied to any large or leading ship, without ...
admiral nThe English are commonly lords of the harbour where they fish, and use all strangers' h...
admiral nAccording to a curious old custom, the sum of sixty pounds sterling is annually bestowed ...
admiral nMoreover as the maner [sic] is in their fishing, every weeke to choose their Admirall a n...
admiral nWe took the lower Admiral's place [in St. John's] for half our boats; the other half we ...
admiral nThe English ships, however, from this period, were considered the largest and best vessel...
admiral nIn the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the skipper of the English fishing vessel ar...
admiral n'the fisherman who has charge of the herring fleet is so called. His chief duty is to see...
admiral nThe "admiral" of each harbor was allowed only the beach and flakes needed for the number ...
admiral n= admiral ship - see OED 5 admiral sb cp 5 = admiral ship for sense 2Used I and SupNot u...
admiral nTwo days afterwards...the Admiral Captain Templeton entered my frame [and] kept me from t...
admiral nADMIRAL n. 1. From the 16c. to early 19c. the first English fishing vessel to enter a Nfl...
Vice-admiral n...that the Master of every such Second Fishing Ship as shall enter any such Harbour ...
admiral n...the ship that first entered the harbour was to be admiral...PRINTED ITEM DNE-citDNE-c...
admiral n...That (according the Ancient Custom there used) every such Fishing Ship from England, W...
admiral nThe epithet of _admiral_ was also formerly applied to any large or leading ship, without ...
admiral nThe English are commonly lords of the harbour where they fish, and use all strangers' h...
admiral nAccording to a curious old custom, the sum of sixty pounds sterling is annually bestowed ...
admiral nMoreover as the maner [sic] is in their fishing, every weeke to choose their Admirall a n...
admiral nWe took the lower Admiral's place [in St. John's] for half our boats; the other half we ...
admiral nThe English ships, however, from this period, were considered the largest and best vessel...
admiral nIn the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the skipper of the English fishing vessel ar...
admiral n'the fisherman who has charge of the herring fleet is so called. His chief duty is to see...
admiral nThe "admiral" of each harbor was allowed only the beach and flakes needed for the number ...
admiral n= admiral ship - see OED 5 admiral sb cp 5 = admiral ship for sense 2Used I and SupNot u...
admiral nTwo days afterwards...the Admiral Captain Templeton entered my frame [and] kept me from t...
admiral nADMIRAL n. 1. From the 16c. to early 19c. the first English fishing vessel to enter a Nfl...
Vice-admiral n...that the Master of every such Second Fishing Ship as shall enter any such Harbour ...